 |
|
#4:
Made Man
Eric Hynes on A History of Violence
Uniquely
positioned as both the best reviewed and
least understood film of the year, A
History of Violence is positively Verhoevian
in its capacity to affirm entertainment
expectations whilst savaging the immorality
of both expectation and entertainment. But
while Paul Verhoeven—ever the emigre jester
in the court of American culture—is satisfied
with simply goosing his audience with its
own dark desires, David Cronenberg takes
a subtler approach, retaining the vocabulary
of a certain genre mythology while scrambling
the syntax. No goosing, no big show, just
an inverted version of the same thing we’ve
come to expect, like a t-shirt with words
backward and the seams showing. Of course,
as any film editor would happily tell you,
moving things around can change a meaning
entirely. That some viewers couldn’t see
much difference between A History of
Violence and Death Wish 3 speaks
not necessarily of media illiteracy but
of the mythology’s sturdiness—and as Cronenberg
deftly demonstrates, of its inherent corruptibility.
The myth? Redemption. It undergirds a landslide majority of cinema, from Ford and Disney to Scorsese, Schrader, Gibson, and Gallo. Furthermore, it’s the ramrod spine of Western civilization. The pauper-to-prince end that justifies the means of capitalism, the instability that gives democracy purpose, the change that forgives and enables, the present that forgets what’s past. The recreation story. Like it or not, all redemption is Christian. That’s the mold. And our culture is mass-produced in His image. There were second chances and comebacks B.C., but the whole point of J.C. was to trump and fulfill all that came before, to make things new and make the past immaterial. We’ve learned the lesson all too well, from reformed criminals, resilient politicians, and recovering addicts, to you-go-girl tell-alls that turn a frown upside down and take a nothing day—or a mean and crooked one—and make it seem worthwhile. All far cries from dying for the world’s sins, but it’s an awfully easy pose to emulate. Metaphors are mutable by nature. And nowhere is the metaphor more durable than in the cinema.
Cronenberg doesn’t ignore his filmic forebears and contemporaries, but what he’s really gunning for is the big-game source material, the original absolution, because postmodernist mucking and riffing ignores the full-on retro-redemptive moment that we’re in. Though working and shooting in his native Canada, Cronenberg sets his film in a midwestern American town that straddles a thin line between idyllic and ghastly—an apt gloss for the current state (of mind) of the entire union. And his dumbed-down protagonist with a fiercely guarded past is a good description for the John Wayne-walking, “what-me-worry”-talking, reformed, recovered, reborn, and redeemed Christian in the White House, master at forgetting and forgiving his own past sins (and silencing those who refuse to play along).
Alas, forgetting doesn’t depend on a single man’s stubborn denial but requires collective amnesia; each man’s conversion is affirmed by a supportive congregation. A History of Violence challenges the dogma of absolution by making moments of viciousness impossible to shake. We may choose, for the sake of retaining the redemptive myth, to forgive and forget what we see, regardless of their monstrosity, but the cost is immense: losing what’s past, denying what is, enabling the unthinkable. The film calls us out on what we’ve trained ourselves to tolerate. Not violence solely (the title, like the film, merits a broader metaphorical reading), but all manner of smallness, weakness, and inhumanity—ugly reality denied for the sake of psychological incomplexity.
|
 |
|
For much
of the film, we don’t know if Tom Stall
(Viggo Mortensen) is mistaken for another
man, experiencing amnesia, or in denial.
Taking him at his word, reading his kind
face, wanting to think the best of him,
we give him every opportunity to prove the
bad guys wrong. But even when the bad guys
are proven right, we root for their quick
eradication—they’ve disrupted a happy family,
changed our kind perception, dug up a buried
past. This sympathy and self-identification
with a reformed character is nothing new,
but it certainly feels different. The difference
is the order in which we receive information.
First we get to know the new man. Then we
consider the possibility of the old man.
Then we encounter the old man. Then we must
reconcile the old man with the new man.
Then, once reconciled, we must watch the
old man overwhelm the new man before simpering
back to his old new self. The dare, the
perversity, is riding the bronco to the
end and remaining at peace with the man
we see before us. The us we’re taught to
be, the WWJD us we really, really want to
be, forgives everything about the old man
in order to believe the new. Aims to forget
everything we know and have seen and give
him another chance. That’s the ideal. That’s
redemption. But forced to sit across from
it, with blood on its hands and guilt in
its cheeks, we’re faced with the immorality
of such an ideal. Do we dare pretend it
didn’t happen? Do we dare overlook what
we know to be? Do we prefer blindness? Do
we imperil ourselves for the sake of believing
the beauty of the myth? What is forgiveness
worth to us, and who will pay for it?
All such questions are shouldered in the
film by Edie Stall (Maria Bello), a good
woman (with no closeted skeletons that we
know of) faced first with the great lie
that is the love of her life and then with
the challenge of accommodating into her
new existence an unacceptable truth. That
she seems to accept this truth is astonishing
(and damningly familiar) enough, but Cronenberg
goes a step further. Not only can she live
with a cold-blooded killer, but it actually
turns her on. Her transformation is ultimately
more disturbing and instructive than Tom/Joey’s,
who simply wants to convert his sins away—and
finds a community happy to cooperate; Edie,
too newly open-eyed to believe her husband’s
redemptive fiction, instead holds firm to
her love, even as its object has changed
from bad to good. A greater, and yet graver
myth trumps “all is forgiven”: love conquers
all. Forgiveness and love, Christianity’s
tidy foundational tenets, are, though beautiful,
so universally appealing that they’re employed
to sanction both truth and fiction, justice
and injustice.
Cronenberg’s art is to convey these harsh
truths in a narrative as humanly compelling
as it is formally playful. Maybe you caught
the conspicuous talk of church between locals
in Tom’s diner, maybe you remember Tom Stall
insisting to his wife that he was “born
again” when he met her, and maybe you noticed
Joey ceremoniously and unsanctimoniously
washing the blood from his hands after his
final killing spree. But you didn’t have
to, because Cronenberg doesn’t make it necessary.
So long as you wait out the terrifying final
sequence, with the Stall family faced by,
and breaking bread with, Tom’s farcical
penitence—you’re either with him or you’re
against him, folks— you’re subject to the
full force of A History of Violence’s
masterful broadside on redemption’s pervasive
and peculiar evil.
|
| |
|
|
|